Breaking just now:Steph Curry given last chance deliver or get sacked
SAN FRANCISCO – No matter where they finish in the rugged Western Conference, whether it’s sixth or 11th or somewhere in between, the Warriors will know they have spent most of the season unable to achieve the No. 1 priority of an NBA contender
The failure to do that this season has been the source of several setbacks, the latest being a 119-112 loss to the Knicks on Monday night at Chase Center that was discouraging enough to take Stephen Curry’s mind off the pursuit of that coveted No. 6 seed.
Maybe a week or two ago, the [No. 6] seed was the motivation,” Curry said. “Right now, I could [not] care less about where you’re at.
“It’s the consistency of how we’re playing. That’s the most important thing because, honestly, who cares what seed you are if you’re going to play like we did tonight? Six, seven, eight, nine, 10 – whatever it is, it doesn’t matter. You’re not going to get very far.
Golden State took the court wearing a 17-17 record at home and headed for the showers lugging a 17-18 mark after losing to a partial squad of Knicks. The Warriors fell behind early and never took a lead. Never even played their way into a tie against a visitor missing three starters.
The Knicks were great tonight right from the very beginning,” coach Steve Kerr said. “They took it to us, they were physical, they played with great force.”
The early intensity between the teams contrasted sharply, which is stunning given the stakes. The Warriors were coming off a rousing victory over the Lakers in Los Angeles, moving into ninth place, only three games out of sixth
Getting there was conceivable, even plausible, but would require a level of focus and execution that was lacking at home against the Knicks.
“I don’t think it’s a lack of effort,” Kerr said. “I think it’s just we weren’t good enough, that simple. We just did not play well enough. It’s disappointing because we got these three home games here this week and we wanted to get off on the right track